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Uplifting self-help books, looking on the bright side and repeating positive affirmations to ourselves - a day never seems to pass when weâre not told to be as upbeat as possible. So why, then, do most people in modern Britain seem to be more stressed, miserable and confused than ever?
One expert claims to have found the answer. In a fascinating new book, Oliver Burkeman, an author who specialises in writing about psychology, claims weâd have a much better time if we actually took a more negative view of life.Â
Itâs time to embrace failure, insecurity and pessimism instead of trying to run away from it, Burkeman says, and simply stop trying so hard to be happy if we want to feel more positive about life.
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âFor a society so fixated on achieving happiness, we seem remarkably incompetent at the task,â Burkeman says. âOne of the best-known general findings of the âscience of happinessâ has been the discovery that the countless advantages of modern life have done little to lift our collective mood.'
Romance, family life and work often bring as much stress as joy. Economic growth does not necessarily make for happier societies, just as increased personal income doesnât make for happier people.
The huge number of self-help books available to us these days also fail to make us happy. This is why publishers refer to the â18-month ruleâ, which states that the person most likely to purchase a self-help book is someone who, in the previous 18 months, purchased a different self-help book â" one that evidently didnât solve all their problems.Â
The existence of a thriving âhappiness industryâ clearly isnât sufficient to engender happiness, and itâs not unreasonable to suspect that it might make matters worse. So what does help?
Oliver Burkeman, an author who specialises in writing about psychology, claims we'd have a better time if we took a more negative view of life
After years spent consulting specialists â" from psychologists to philosophers and even Buddhists â" Burkeman realised they all agreed on one thing: the effort to feel happy is precisely the thing that makes us miserable. And it is our constant struggle to eliminate the negative â" insecurity, uncertainty, failure, or sadness â" that causes us to feel so insecure, anxious, uncertain or unhappy.
Instead, they argued for an alternative â" a ânegative pathâ to happiness. It involved learning to enjoy uncertainty, embracing insecurity, stopping trying to think positively, and becoming familiar with failure. In short, in order to be truly happy, we might actually need to be willing to experience more negative emotions â" or, at least, to learn to stop running so hard from them. So how can pessimism really be as healthy and productive as optimism? Burkeman explains:
POSITIVE THINKERS ACHIEVE LESS
Behind many of todayâs most popular approaches to happiness lies one simple philosophy â" positive visualisation. If you picture things turning out well, the theory goes, theyâre far more likely to do so. And, yes, focusing on a positive outcome, rather than a negative one, seems like a sensible way of maximising your chances of success.
But according to the German-born psychologist Gabriele Oettingen, spending time and en ergy thinking about how well things could go actually reduces most peopleâs motivation to achieve them. For example, in one experiment, subjects who were encouraged to visualise having a particularly high-achieving week at work were shown to achieve significantly less than those who were invited to think about the coming week, but given no further guidelines on how to do so.
In experiment after experiment, Oettingen and her team found that people responded to positive visualisation by relaxing and doing less. They seemed, subconsciously, to have confused visualising success with having already achieved it. By choosing to maintain only positive beliefs about the future, the positive thinker ends up being less prepared when things eventually happen that she canât persuade herself to believe are good.
This is a problem underlying all approaches to happiness that set too great a store by optimism. Itâs important to keep a realistic view of what lies ahead if you want to feel truly happy.
WORRYING IS GOOD FOR YOU
Do you lie awake at night, worrying that youâllâlose your job? Do you fret âyour  partner might leave you and that youâll be left all on your own? We normally try to assuage our worries about the future by seeking reassurance â" by trying to persuade ourselves that everything will be all righ t. But positive reassurance is a double-edged sword. In the short term, it can be wonderful, smoothing away worries. But in the long term, it requires constant maintenance.
If you offer reassurance to a friend who is in the grip of anxiety, for instance, youâll often find that a few days later sheâll be back for more.
Worse, reassurance can actually exacerbate anxiety. When you reassure your friend that the worst-case scenario she fears probably wonât occur, you are inadvertently reinforcing her belief that it would be catastrophic if it did. But it is also true that when things do go wrong, theyâll almost certainly go less wrong than you were fearing.
Those fears are based on irrational judgments about the future, usually because you havenât thought the matter through in sufficient detail. Thinking about, rather than trying to ignore, the worst-case scenario is the way to replace these irrational notions with more rational judgments . Imagine how wrong things could go for you in reality, and you will usually find that your fears were exaggerated.
If you lost your job, there are steps you could take to find a new one; if you lost your relationship, you would probably manage to find some happiness in life. Looking on the downside and actually confronting the worst-case scenario saps it of much of its anxiety-inducing power.
DONâT SET BIG GOALS - JUST GO WITH THE FLOW
If weâre going to be positive about life, we need to have some goals to aim for, donât we? Or do we? According to many self-help scientists, setting âpositiveâ goals for yourself can often mean setting yourself up for failure â" even disaster â" rather than the success you might imagine. What motivates our investment in goals and planning for the future, they suggest, is rarely any sober recognition of the virtues of preparation and looking ahead. Rather, itâs how deeply uncomfortable we fee l when life is uncertain. We hate not knowing what is around the corner, so we set goals to try to bring some certainty into our lives.
It is alarming to consider how many major life decisions we take primarily to minimise present-moment emotional discomfort. To understand what this means, try the following exercise. Consider any significant decision youâve ever taken that you subsequently came to regret: perhaps a job you accepted even though, looking back, itâs clear that it was mismatched to your interests or abilities. If it felt like a difficult decision at the time, then itâs likely that you felt the gut-knotting ache of uncertainty; afterwards, having made a decision, did those feelings subside?
If so, this points to the possibility that your motivation in taking the decision was simply the urgent need to get rid of your feelings of uncertainty.
Taking a more relaxed approach to your future, working with what you have now and movi ng forward in small steps, rather than setting up one big, inflexible goal, is a far less pressurised way to live. Itâs an attitude that made a chemist realise the insufficiently sticky glue heâd developed could be used for Post-it Notes. Trust the uncertain things beyond your control and go with the flow.
HIGH SELF-ESTEEM WILL MAKE YOU MISERABLE
We tend to assume that having high self-esteem is a good thing, but some psychologists have long suspected that there might be something wrong with the whole notion â" because it rests on the assumption that your personality can be given a âgoodâ or âbadâ rating. When you rate your âselfâ highly, you actually create the possibility of rating your âselfâ poorly. Itâs a preposterous over-generalisation. We all behave in good ways and bad ways. Smothering all these nuances with a blanket notion of self-esteem may prove a recipe for misery.
Itâs better to rate each act as good or bad. Seek to perform as many good ones â" and as few bad ones â" as possible. But leave your âselfâ out of it.
Extracted from THE ANTIDOTE by Oliver Burkeman, published by Canongate at £15. Copyright (c) 2012 Oliver Burkeman. To order a copy for £12.99 (including pp), call 0843 382 0000.
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See just goes to prove, being pesamistic means your always happy and never dissapointed with life. If the worst happens it was expected, but if it doesn't, it's always a pleasent suprise
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I dislike it when people say (especially in interviews) 'And where do you see yourself in 5 years time?' It's like how the ffffff would I know? Things can change dramatically within a nano second in life. I just wait for opportunities to come my way, decide whether to take them, will it be better for me or not and just do it that way. So far I've been lucky and many amazing things have come out of left field that have actually put me in a very good place right now. No planning, no scheming, no intense thoughts of what will I do with my life or anything like that. Live for today really, the moment. If I get rich well ya hoooooo! If not I know I'll get by which is good enough for me if that makes any sense lol.
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Bunk! Money makes me happy! Anyone who says otherwise is lying! Think of the last time you saw someone jump for joy after being mugged!
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